05.02.2013 Views

Remembering the Space Age. - Black Vault Radio Network (BVRN)

Remembering the Space Age. - Black Vault Radio Network (BVRN)

Remembering the Space Age. - Black Vault Radio Network (BVRN)

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

SpaCeFlIght IN <strong>the</strong> NatIoNal ImagINatIoN<br />

capability. eSa still remains <strong>the</strong> only multinational organization to develop its<br />

own satellite launch capability, having achieved that ability in 1979. 2<br />

FouNdINg Fa<strong>the</strong>rS<br />

<strong>the</strong> frst trope of a national space history is that of <strong>the</strong> “founding fa<strong>the</strong>r.” 3<br />

each space program arrives in <strong>the</strong> historical record with a singular fgure whose<br />

determinations mirror and telescope <strong>the</strong> spacefaring ambitions of <strong>the</strong> nation<br />

in question. For <strong>the</strong> Soviet union, <strong>the</strong>re was Sergei Korolev (1906-1966), for<br />

<strong>the</strong> united States, Wernher von braun (1911-1977), for Japan, hideo Itokawa<br />

(1912-1999), for China, Qian Xuesen (1911-), for India, Vikram Sarabhai<br />

(1919-1971), and for Israel, Yuval Ne’eman (1925-2006). 4 In some cases, <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

claims as founding fa<strong>the</strong>rs are contested—especially in <strong>the</strong> case of von braun—<br />

but <strong>the</strong> commonalities between <strong>the</strong>m are striking. each of <strong>the</strong>se individuals<br />

embodies a unique combination of dualities: <strong>the</strong>y are always both capable and<br />

visionary, brilliant engineers and unequalled managers, and comfortable with<br />

<strong>the</strong> topmost levels of power and yet accessible to <strong>the</strong> rank-and-fle technician.<br />

<strong>the</strong>re are early traumas typically associated with each, ordeals that were<br />

physical, moral, or professional. For example, Korolev served a sentence in <strong>the</strong><br />

gulag, von braun never fully escaped <strong>the</strong> moral quandaries of being associated<br />

with <strong>the</strong> dora labor camp in Nazi germany, and Qian’s life and career were<br />

disrupted by <strong>the</strong> red Scare in <strong>the</strong> 1950s when he was deported to China on<br />

charges of being a communist sympathizer. In all cases, <strong>the</strong>se men were seen as<br />

overcoming <strong>the</strong>se adversities to achieve prominence later in <strong>the</strong>ir lives. For those<br />

reconstructing narratives of national space programs, <strong>the</strong>se traumas become<br />

metaphors for <strong>the</strong> uphill battles faced by <strong>the</strong> space programs <strong>the</strong>mselves.<br />

2. although I do not focus on <strong>the</strong>m, <strong>the</strong> same patterns also apply to those countries that are close<br />

to achieving a domestic capability to launch satellites into orbit but have not yet done so: brazil,<br />

North Korea, Iran, and South Korea. In addition, I do not explore <strong>the</strong> strategies of those dozens<br />

of nations that have developed or purchased satellites but lack <strong>the</strong> expertise or resources to<br />

launch <strong>the</strong>m <strong>the</strong>mselves and, <strong>the</strong>refore, pay o<strong>the</strong>r nations or agencies to do so.<br />

3. It goes without saying that <strong>the</strong>re were no women founders of space programs; <strong>the</strong> history of<br />

space exploration has been dominated by men in all nations, partly because of <strong>the</strong> substantive<br />

obstacles faced by women in pursuing higher education in <strong>the</strong> applied sciences or engineering.<br />

on <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r hand, women in large numbers did contribute to space programs globally<br />

at mid- and lower-levels of management (e.g., as computer operators, medical personnel,<br />

draftspersons, administrative staf, custodial laborers, and daycare workers). because social<br />

history has not been a concern for space historians, <strong>the</strong>se women and <strong>the</strong>ir contributions<br />

remain largely invisible in most space history narratives.<br />

4. For useful biographies of some of <strong>the</strong>se individuals, see Iaroslav golovanov, Korolev: fakty i mify<br />

(moscow: Nauka, 1994); michael J. Neufeld, Von Braun: Dreamer of <strong>Space</strong>, Engineer of War (New<br />

York: alfred a. Knopf, 2007); Iris Chang, The Thread of <strong>the</strong> Silkworm (New York: basic books,<br />

1995);amrita Shah, Vikram Sarabhai:A Life (New delhi: penguin Viking, 2007).<br />

19

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!